‘Bro’s Club’ suit cites type of BofA practices under U.S. probe

(Bloomberg) -- A managing director suing Bank of America for gender discrimination by what she called an in-house “bro’s club” outlined a host of practices -- including front-running, lying to customers and manipulating bond prices -- in a complaint filed in Manhattan that set traders on Wall Street buzzing.

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Bank of America by Bloomberg

The lawsuit by Megan Messina, a 42-year-old co-head of the global structured credit products team, describes practices similar to those at the center of a longstanding investigation of the bank by federal prosecutors in North Carolina.

For at least two years, prosecutors there have been investigating whether traders engaged in front-running, or trading ahead of client orders, according to a person familiar with the matter. Messina’s complaint describes events far more recent.

“We take all allegations of inappropriate behavior seriously and investigate them thoroughly,” Bill Halldin, a spokesman for Bank of America, said Tuesday. Halldin declined to comment on the federal investigation.

In her lawsuit, Messina alleges her boss ran what she characterized as a “ ‘bro’s club’ of all-male sycophants.” She said she received only a third of the $5.5 million given a male colleague with the same title. She said she also filed a complaint May 12 with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

Her allegations go beyond the personal discrimination she said she encountered to cover the bank’s dealings with clients.

Messina says she was also the target of retaliation after she pointed out what she characterized as illegal behaviors by some of the people she worked with. Her complaint alleges that in March, she attempted to arrange a trade between Citi Treasury -- Citibank’s internal investing group -- and another client. Her co-head suggested that the bank buy the bonds for its own book.

FRONT-RUNNING
That was an example of front-running, Messina alleged in her complaint filed Monday. “You do this all the time. But you should know that it is front-running, it is illegal, and I don’t agree with it,” she said according to the complaint. The co-head bought the bonds, kept them for the bank’s profit and didn’t offer them to Citi, according to the complaint.

The federal investigation of Bank of America traders was disclosed by FINRA in 2013, and is being run out of the U.S. Attorney’s office in the Western District of North Carolina. The CFTC, the primary regulator of the derivatives market, is also investigating.

Representatives of Citigroup, the CFTC and the U.S. Attorney’s Office didn’t immediately respond to e-mails seeking comment on the lawsuit.

Front-running in various products has long been a concern of prosecutors, who try to ferret out attempts by market participants to take advantage of information not publicly available.

--With addition reporting by Robert Burnson and Patricia Hurtado.


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